Earth Heat Budget System
Earth Heat Budget System
Earth Heat Budget System
R.NO: GEO-16
BS GEOGROPHY-I
QUESTION: 01
Earth’s heat budget. Of all of the solar radiation reaching Earth, 30% is
reflected back to space and 70% is absorbed by the Earth (47%) and
atmosphere (23%). The heat absorbed by the land and oceans is
exchanged with the atmosphere through conduction, radiation, and latent
heat (phase change). The heat absorbed by the atmosphere is eventually
radiated back into space (PW).
Earth, third planet from the Sun and the fifth largest planet in the solar
system in terms of size and mass. Its single most outstanding feature is that its
near-surface environments are the only places in the universe known to harbour
life. It is designated by the symbol ♁. derives from Old English and Germanic
words for ground and earth, and it is the only name for a planet of the solar
system that does not come from Greco-Roman mythology.
Heat Storage
•Absorbed radiative energy in the atmosphere is transformed into sensible and
latent energy. •Over land this manifests as increases in temperature and/or
evaporation, the partitioning depends on available moisture and the ground
vegetation cover.
•In the tropics in summer the land warms relative to the ocean and hence
develops monsoon systems.
•Water is evaporated from the ocean surface, cooling the ocean.
•As water vapour and thus latent energy it can be transported considerable
distance before removal by precipitation, provided an efficient heat transport
mechanism.
• Increases in temperature cause an increase in the internal energy of the
atmosphere, casuing it to expand, changing its altitude and hence potential
energy. The combination of internal and potential energy can be expressed as
enthalpy or sensible heat.
Conduction
is the transfer of heat through direct contact between the surface
and the atmosphere. Air is a relatively poor thermal conductor (which means it
is a good insulator), so conduction represents only a small part of the energy
transfer between the Earth and the atmosphere; equal to about 7% of the
incoming solar energy.
Radiation
All bodies with a temperature above absolute zero (-273o C) radiate heat in the
form of longwave, infrared radiation. The warmed Earth is no exception, and
about 16% of the original solar energy is radiated from the Earth to the
atmosphere (Figure 8.1.1). Some of this radiated energy will dissipate into
space, but a significant amount of heat will be absorbed by the atmosphere.
This is the basis for the greenhouse effect
In the greenhouse effect, shortwave solar radiation passes through
the atmosphere and reaches the Earth’s surface where it gets absorbed.
When the radiation is re-emitted by the Earth, it is now in the form of long
wavelength, infrared radiation, which does not easily pass through the
atmosphere. Instead, this infrared radiation is absorbed by the atmosphere,
particularly by the greenhouse gases such as CO2, methane, and water vapor. As a
result, the atmosphere heats up. Without the greenhouse effect, the average
temperature on Earth would be about -18o C, which is too cold for liquid water,
and therefore life as we know it could not exist!
Latent heat
The largest pathway for heat exchange between the land or oceans
and the atmosphere is latent heat transferred through phase changes; heat
released or absorbed when water moves between solid, liquid, and vapor
forms.Heat must be added to liquid water to make it evaporate, and when
water vapor is formed, that heat is removed from the ocean and transferred to
the atmosphere along with the water vapor. When water vapor condenses into
rain, that heat is then returned to the oceans. The same process happens with
the formation and melting of ice. Heat is absorbed by ice when it melts, and
heat is released when ice forms, and these phase changes transfer heat
between the oceans and the atmosphere.
To complete the heat budget, the heat that is absorbed by the
atmosphere either directly from solar radiation or as a result of conduction,
radiation and latent heat, is eventually radiated back into space.
Finally, the poles reflect more solar energy than other parts of the Earth
because the poles have a higher albedo. The albedo refers to reflectivity of a
surface. Lighter surfaces are more reflective than darker surfaces (which
absorb more energy), and therefore have a higher albedo. At the poles, the
ice, snow and cloud cover create a much higher albedo, and the poles reflect
more and absorb less solar energy than the lower latitudes. Through all of
these mechanisms, the poles absorb much less solar radiation than equatorial
regions, which is why the poles are cold and the tropics are very warm.
QUESTION: 02
TECTONIC PLATES
Tectonic plates, large slabs of rock that divide Earth’s crust, move constantly
to reshape the Earth’s landscape. Movement of the plates over Earth’s surface
is termed plate tectonics. Plates move at a rate of a few centimeters a year,
about the same rate fingernails grow.
Tectonic plates are gigantic pieces of the Earth's crust and
uppermost mantle. They are made up of oceanic crust and continental
crust. Earthquakes occur around mid-ocean ridges and the large faults
which mark the edges of the plates.
The World Atlas names seven major plates: African, Antarctic, Eurasian,
Indo-Australian, North American, Pacific and South American.
California is located at the seam of the Pacific Plate, which is the world’s
largest plate at 39,768,522 square miles, and the Northern American plate.
1. Hot mantle from the two adjacent cells rises at the ridge axis, creating new
ocean crust.
2. The top limb of the convection cell moves horizontally away from the ridge
crest, as does the new seafloor.
3. The outer limbs of the convection cells plunge down into the deeper mantle,
dragging oceanic crust as well. This takes place at the deep sea trenches.
4. The material sinks to the core and moves horizontally.
5. The material heats up and reaches the zone where it rises again
The Hawaiian Islands were created by the Pacific Plate, which is the world’s
largest plate at 39,768,522 square miles.
Ocean-Continental collision
When oceanic crust converges with continental crust, the denser oceanic plate
plunges beneath the continental plate. This process, called subduction, occurs at
the oceanic trenches
Subduction of an oceanic plate beneath a continental plate causes earthquakes and forms a line of volcanoes
known as a continental arc.
Ocean-Oceanic collision
When two oceanic plates converge, the older, denser plate will subduct into the
mantle. An ocean trench marks the location where the plate is pushed down into
the mantle. The line of volcanoes that grows on the upper oceanic plate is
an island arc. Do you think earthquakes are common in these regions.
. (a) Subduction of an ocean plate beneath an ocean plate results in a volcanic island arc, an ocean trench and
many earthquakes. (b) Japan is an arc-shaped island arc composed of volcanoes off the Asian mainland, as
seen in this satellite image.
Continent-Continental collision
Continental plates are too buoyant to subduct. What happens to continental
material when it collides? Since it has nowhere to go but up, this creates some of
the world’s largest mountains ranges. Magma cannot penetrate this thick crust so
there are no volcanoes, although the magma stays in the crust. Metamorphic
rocks are common because of the stress the continental crust experiences. With
enormous slabs of crust smashing together, continent-continent collisions bring
on numerous and large earthquakes.
. (a) In continent-continent convergence, the plates push upward to create a high mountain range. (b) The world’s
highest mountains, the Himalayas, are the result of the collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate, seen in this
photo from the International Space Station.